When you get to chips that arduino doesn't make an 'offical' board for (644P/1284P,etc) then your chart is going to be the reflection of just one persons or one companies decision on what 'arduino' abstracted pin number to use with which port/pins on the AVR chip in question.

As a minimum your chart should state who's pins_arduino.h file was used in the rendition of the pin outs. Otherwise there could be lots of confusion for some users of these 'non-standard-arduino' AVR chips

When you get to chips that arduino doesn't make an 'offical' board for (644P/1284P,etc) then your chart is going to be the reflection of just one persons or one companies decision on what 'arduino' abstracted pin number to use with which port/pins on the AVR chip in question.

As a minimum your chart should state who's pins_arduino.h file was used in the rendition of the pin outs. Otherwise there could be lots of confusion for some users of these 'non-standard-arduino' AVR chips

Lefty

It 's true. Each person makes their own version. The solution is to create an editable PDF.I'm working on.

yopero

yojimbo

I wasn't even a member of this forum, just a constant lurker. I had to register just so I could say THANK YOU and amazing work. This will be incredibly useful for someone with such a shoddy memory as I.